41,632 research outputs found
Finite element (MARC) solution technologies for viscoplastic analyses
A need for development of realistic constitutive models for structural components operating at high temperatures, accompanied by appropriate solution technologies for stress/life analyses of these components is studied. Viscoplastic models provide a better description of inelastic behavior of materials, but their mathematical structure is very complex. The highly nonlinear and stiff nature of the constitutive equations makes analytical solutions difficult. Therefore, suitable solution, finite element or other numerical, technologies must be developed to make these models adaptable for better and rational designs of components. NASA-Lewis has developed several solution technologies and successfully applied them to the solution of a number of uniaxial and multiaxial problems. Some of these solution technologies are described along with the models and representative results. The solution technologies developed and presented encompass a wide range of models, such as, isotropic, anisotropic, metal matrix composites, and single crystal models
Structural response of SSME turbine blade airfoils
Reusable space propulsion hot gas-path components are required to operate under severe thermal and mechanical loading conditions. These operating conditions produce elevated temperature and thermal transients which results in significant thermally induced inelastic strains, particularly, in the turbopump turbine blades. An inelastic analysis for this component may therefore be necessary. Anisotropic alloys such as MAR M-247 or PWA-1480 are being considered to meet the safety and durability requirements of this component. An anisotropic inelastic structural analysis for an SSME fuel turbopump turbine blade was performed. The thermal loads used resulted from a transient heat transfer analysis of a turbine blade. A comparison of preliminary results from the elastic and inelastic analyses is presented
High magnetic field pulsars and magnetars: a unified picture
We propose a unified picture of high magnetic field radio pulsars and
magnetars by arguing that they are all rotating high-field neutron stars, but
have different orientations of their magnetic axes with respective to their
rotation axes. In strong magnetic fields where photon splitting suppresses pair
creation near the surface, the high-field pulsars can have active inner
accelerators while the anomalous X-ray pulsars cannot. This can account for the
very different observed emission characteristics of the anomalous X-ray pulsar
1E 2259+586 and the high field radio pulsar PSR J1814-1744. A predicted
consequence of this picture is that radio pulsars having surface magnetic field
greater than about G should not exist.Comment: 5 pages, emulateapj style, accepted for publication in the ApJ
Letter
Magnetic Photon Splitting: Computations of Proper-time Rates and Spectra
The splitting of photons in the presence of an intense magnetic field has
recently found astrophysical applications in polar cap models of gamma-ray
pulsars and in magnetar scenarios for soft gamma repeaters. Numerical
computation of the polarization-dependent rates of this third order QED process
for arbitrary field strengths and energies below pair creation threshold is
difficult: thus early analyses focused on analytic developments and simpler
asymptotic forms. The recent astrophysical interest spurred the use of the
S-matrix approach by Mentzel, Berg and Wunner to determine splitting rates. In
this paper, we present numerical computations of a full proper-time expression
for the rate of splitting that was obtained by Stoneham, and is exact up to the
pair creation threshold. While the numerical results derived here are in accord
with the earlier asymptotic forms due to Adler, our computed rates still differ
by as much as factors of 3 from the S-matrix re-evaluation of Wilke and Wunner,
reflecting the extreme difficulty of generating accurate S-matrix numerics for
fields below about \teq{4.4\times 10^{13}}Gauss. We find that our proper-time
rates appear very accurate, and exceed Adler's asymptotic specializations
significantly only for photon energies just below pair threshold and for
supercritical fields, but always by less than a factor of around 2.6. We also
provide a useful analytic series expansion for the scattering amplitude valid
at low energies.Comment: 13 pages, AASTeX format, including 3 eps figures, ApJ in pres
C57BL/6 life span study: age-related declines in muscle power production and contractile velocity
Quantification of key outcome measures in animal models of aging is an important step preceding intervention testing. One such measurement, skeletal muscle power generation (force * velocity), is critical for dynamic movement. Prior research focused on maximum power (P max), which occurs around 30-40 % of maximum load. However, movement occurs over the entire load range. Thus, the primary purpose of this study was to determine the effect of age on power generation during concentric contractions in the extensor digitorum longus (EDL) and soleus muscles over the load range from 10 to 90 % of peak isometric tetanic force (P 0). Adult, old, and elderly male C57BL/6 mice were examined for contractile function (6-7 months old, 100 % survival; ~24 months, 75 %; and ~28 months, 50 % P 0). The shape of the force-velocity curve also changed with age (a/P 0 increased). In addition, there were prolonged contraction times to maximum force and shifts in the distribution of the myosin light and heavy chain isoforms in the EDL. The results demonstrate that age-associated difficulty in movement during challenging tasks is likely due, in addition to overall reduced force output, to an accelerated deterioration of power production and contractile velocity under heavily loaded conditions.R01 AG017768 - NIA NIH HHS; F31 AG044108 - NIA NIH HHS; T32 AG029796 - NIA NIH HHS; R01 EY15313 - NEI NIH HHS; R01 EY015313 - NEI NIH HH
Lens Galaxy Properties of SBS1520+530: Insights from Keck Spectroscopy and AO Imaging
We report on an investigation of the SBS 1520+530 gravitational lens system
and its environment using archival HST imaging, Keck spectroscopic data, and
Keck adaptive-optics imaging. The AO imaging has allowed us to fix the lens
galaxy properties with a high degree of precision when performing the lens
modeling, and the data indicate that the lens has an elliptical morphology and
perhaps a disk. The new spectroscopic data suggest that previous determinations
of the lens redshift may be incorrect, and we report an updated, though
inconclusive, value z_lens = 0.761. We have also spectroscopically confirmed
the existence of several galaxy groups at approximately the redshift of the
lens system. We create new models of the lens system that explicitly account
for the environment of the lens, and we also include improved constraints on
the lensing galaxy from our adaptive-optics imaging. Lens models created with
these new data can be well-fit with a steeper than isothermal mass slope (alpha
= 2.29, with the density proportional to r^-alpha) if H_0 is fixed at 72
km/s/Mpc; isothermal models require H_0 ~ 50 km/s/Mpc. The steepened profile
may indicate that the lens is in a transient perturbed state caused by
interactions with a nearby galaxy.Comment: 12 pages, 10 figures, submitted to Ap
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